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Summer Squash for Your Home Garden

By Matt Whisman, published Jun 20, 2007
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Composing several species of the Cucurbita-genus classification of botany, squash is a plant of the New World previously unknown to western scientists until introduced upon encountering native Americans with furthered European exploration. Cultivated for nearly ten millennia, squash comprises the "three sisters" of many Native American tribes, a trio of three indigenous plants which provided a great deal of food; the other two were beans and maize. This grouping involved perhaps the first active practice of companion planting in the ancient world, where each plant cultivated contributed to the health of others nearby. The following varieties of summer squash present an interesting mix of the plant's varied heirloom strains. Most fall into the species Cucurbita pepo, which also includes many pumpkins.

To begin with, several varieties of zucchini have been cultivated to this point, resulting in multiple cucumber or bottle shaped fruit which range in color from yellow to green and grey. Popularly available seed varieties include black, green, grey, and dark yellow zucchini. Such squash are often bush-like, instead of mostly comprising vines, and it should be remembered that green varieties reap a heavier harvest than do those which produce yellow fruit. Most will bear edible offspring within fifty to sixty days, though some may take a few weeks longer. If the overly ambitious crops produce too numerous a fruit to give away or use before decomposition occurs, then cold storage and canning present viable preservation opportunities.

Next, several scallop-shaped squashes offer multi-use fruits often turned into excellent sautees. Black beauty squash was first introduced at the beginning of the twentieth century, and its green and matte black fruits can be used in any manner as other summer squash. Another green variety, golden scallop, is only yellow upon the outside, the inside of the fruit containing light green flesh. White patty pan and Benning's green-tint squash are two other scalloped varieties, about seven inches in size, of a flat shape and with deeply ridged edges.

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